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UN Resolution 1737

Iran hangs second teenager PDF Print E-mail
Wednesday, 27 August 2008

By Pam O'Toole
BBC News

ImageHuman rights organisations have condemned the execution of another juvenile offender in Iran on Tuesday.

Behnam Zare was the second Iranian in a week to be put to death for a crime he committed when he was under 18 and the sixth such execution in 2008.

Human rights groups say neither Zare's family nor his lawyer were notified prior to the execution.

Iran is the only country known to have executed people this year for crimes committed while they were minors.

Behnam Zare was convicted of murder after killing another young man in a street fight three years ago.

One Iranian newspaper said Zare, who was 15 at the time, had told the court it had been an accident and he had asked the victim's family for forgiveness.

But on Tuesday he was hanged in a prison in the southern city of Shiraz.

Abhorrent practice

International human rights organisations have condemned Zare's execution. Human Rights Watch said Iran led the world in executing juvenile offenders.

Everywhere else, it said, countries were moving to end what it called this abhorrent practice, but in Iran the number of death sentences seemed to be increasing.

Amnesty International said the situation of juvenile offenders facing execution in Iran had reached a crisis level with at least 132 of them known to be on death row.

The execution of Behnam Zare follows that of another juvenile offender, Reza Hejazi, just a week ago.

In both cases, their lawyers were reportedly not given 48 hours notice of the impending executions, as required by Iranian law.

In the case of Behnam Zare, human rights groups say, his family was also given no advance notification.

Iran was second only to China in the number of overall executions it carried out in 2007 for crimes including murder, rape, drug-trafficking and armed robbery.

Amnesty says so far this year at least 227 people have been executed in Iran.





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In Focus
Iran's nuclear standoff
  • AP: Britain's foreign policy chief said Friday that Iran continues to pose the most serious threat to the world, warning that Tehran's suspected pursuit of nuclear weapons risks an arms race across the Middle East.

  • Reuters: France said on Friday the latest U.N. report on Iran's nuclear programme reinforced concerns that it was trying to develop weaponry, and urged it to halt sensitive nuclear work.

  • Reuters: The head of the U.N. nuclear watchdog Mohamed ElBaradei should report on Iran's nuclear programme neutrally and with fairness, an influential cleric said on Friday after this week's report on Iran's atomic work.

  • Reuters: Iran rejected Friday U.S. reports it had enriched enough uranium to make an atom bomb, saying this would require steps it had ruled out like ejecting U.N. inspectors and leaving the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT).

  • Iran Focus: Tehran, Iran, Nov. 20 - The following is the full text of the most recent report by the International Atomic Energy Agency's director-general on the level of Iranian cooperation over its suspected nuclear weapons program.

  • Reuters: The UK government accused Iran on Thursday of failing to cooperate with a United Nations watchdog and said this increased its concerns over Tehran's nuclear programme.

  • New York Times: Iran has now produced roughly enough nuclear material to make, with added purification, a single atom bomb, according to nuclear experts analyzing the latest report from global atomic inspectors.

  • Wall Street Journal: United Nations investigators found "significant" traces of uranium used in reactors at the wreckage of a Syrian facility that Israel bombed last year, and Iran is ramping up production of nuclear fuel while denying investigators access, the International Atomic Energy Agency reported Wednesday.

  • Reuters: An inquiry by the U.N. nuclear watchdog into alleged atom bomb research by Iran has degenerated into a silent standoff a few months after Tehran asserted "the matter is over," U.N. officials said on Wednesday.

  • AFP: Iran is still defying UN demands to suspend uranium enrichment and not cooperating with investigations into claims that its nuclear programme has a military aspect, the UN atomic watchdog said Wednesday.

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